Decreased Aggression; Increased Focus and Speech

Submitted by Carrie Eskenazi Speech-Language Pathologist

Decreased Aggression; Increased Focus and Speech
Before
After
Little to no verbal interaction
Makes verbal choices; chats about his family
Difficulty separating from parents
Separates easily from parents
Inability to focus
Stays on task
No parallel or pretend play
Participates in reciprocal play
Hard to handle
Physical aggression toward mother has decreased greatly

 

S.T. is a 4-year-old boy who came to me with little to no verbal interaction, poor eye contact, no parallel play skills, no pretend play skills, difficulty separating from parents and little to no focused attention for play and other tasks.

I chose rhythmic rocking [from the Brain and Sensory Foundations course] for this student because he did not want to be touched and would not be still long enough to assess. I demonstrated rhythmic rocking for his parents and demonstrated briefly with S.T.
.  
I told S.T.’s parents to start doing rhythmic rocking with him while he slept since he did not want to lie down or be still for long enough to do it with me or with them.  They began doing rhythmic rocking with him right away while he slept and began trying it with him while awake.  

Within 2 weeks, he was requesting it from his parents multiple times a day.

Within 4 weeks, he was separating easily from his parents and his attention to tasks had increased greatly.  

Within 6 weeks, he was greeting me, making verbal choices, participating in reciprocal play and having an expressive language explosion. 

Within 10 weeks, he was sharing stories about his family with me and physical aggression toward his mother had decreased greatly.  

Other changes took place in his body, such as increased mucus/itchiness, increased body awareness, increased engagement with his environment.

I learned that rhythmic movements really worked for him and were a good place to start given that he did not like touch from others and that he typically was not still for more than a few seconds. This was my first ‘experiment’ with the rhythmic movements and I began using them with many other clients.  

S.T. changed rapidly from session to session. His original goals were met quickly and this fall, he is in a regular pre-school classroom and doing well. I have added some reflex integration work with him as well during therapy sessions and parents continue to do rhythmic rocking at home.

[Emphasis added]

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